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“How am I going to live?”: exploring barriers to ART adherence among adolescents and young adults living with HIV in Uganda

机译:“我将如何生活?”:在乌干达探索艾滋病毒携带者的青少年之间的障碍

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Studies from sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) document how barriers to ART adherence present additional complications among adolescents and young adults living with HIV. We qualitatively explored barriers to ART adherence in Uganda among individuals age 14–24 to understand the unique challenges faced by this age group. We conducted focus group (FG) discussions with Community Advisory Board members (n?=?1), health care providers (n?=?2), and male and female groups of adolescents age 14–17 (n?=?2) and youth age 18–24 (n?=?2) in Kampala, Uganda. FGs were transcribed verbatim and translated from Luganda into English. Two investigators independently reviewed all transcripts, developed a detailed codebook, achieved a pooled Cohen’s Kappa of 0.79 and 0.80, and used a directed content analysis to identify key themes. Four barriers to ART adherence emerged: 1) poverty limited adolescents’ ability to buy food and undercut efforts to become economically independent in their transition from adolescence to adulthood; 2) school attendance limited their privacy, further disrupting ART adherence; 3) family support was unreliable, and youth often struggled with a constant change in guardianship because they had lost their biological parents to HIV. In contrast peer influence, especially among HIV-positive youth, was strong and created an important network to support ART adherence; 4) the burden of taking multiple medications daily frustrated youth, often leading to so-called ‘drug holidays.’ Adolescent and youth-specific issues around disclosure emerged across three of the four barriers. To be effective, programs and policies to improve ART adherence among youth in Uganda must address the special challenges that adolescents and young adults confront in achieving optimal adherence. For example, training on budgeting and savings practices could help promote their transition to financial independence. School staff could develop strategies to help students take their medications consistently and confidentially. While challenging to extend the range of services provided by HIV clinics, successful efforts will require engaging the family, peers, and larger community of health and educational providers to support adolescents and young adults living with HIV to live longer and healthier lives. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02514356 . Registered August 3, 2015.
机译:撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)的研究记录了抗病毒治疗依从性的障碍如何在感染艾滋病毒的青少年和年轻人中带来更多的并发症。我们定性地探索了14-24岁人群在乌干达坚持抗逆转录病毒疗法的障碍,以了解该年龄组面临的独特挑战。我们与社区咨询委员会成员(n?=?1),卫生保健提供者(n?=?2)以及14-17岁的青少年男女(n?=?2)进行了焦点小组(FG)讨论。和乌干达坎帕拉的18-24岁青年(n?=?2)。 FG被逐字记录并从卢干达翻译成英文。两名调查人员独立审查了所有笔录,开发了详细的密码本,将Cohen的Kappa汇总为0.79和0.80,并使用定向内容分析来识别关键主题。坚持抗逆转录病毒疗法的四个障碍出现了:1)贫困限制了青少年的购买能力,削弱了从青春期到成年的经济独立性的努力; 2)上学限制了他们的隐私,进一步打乱了ART的遵守; 3)家庭支持不可靠,并且青年人经常因监护人的不断变化而挣扎,因为他们失去了亲生父母感染艾滋病毒。相比之下,同龄人的影响力,特别是在艾滋病毒阳性青年中的影响力很强,并形成了支持抗逆转录病毒疗法依从性的重要网络; 4)每天服用多种药物的负担使年轻人感到沮丧,这常常导致所谓的“药物假期”。围绕公开信息的青少年和青少年特有的问题出现在四个障碍中的三个障碍中。为提高效率,提高乌干达青年人对ART依从性的计划和政策必须解决青少年和年轻人在实现最佳依从性方面面临的特殊挑战。例如,有关预算和储蓄做法的培训可以帮助促进其向财务独立的过渡。学校工作人员可以制定策略来帮助学生一致且机密地服药。在扩大艾滋病毒诊所提供的服务范围面临挑战的同时,成功的努力将需要让家人,同龄人以及更大范围的卫生保健和教育提供者参与,以支持艾滋病毒携带者的青少年和年轻人更长寿,更健康。 ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT02514356。 2015年8月3日注册。

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